Décalage horaire (2002)
Directed by Danièle Thompson

Comedy / Romance
aka: Jet Lag

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Decalage horaire (2002)
After the success of her first film as a director, La Buche, in 1999, Danièle Thompson once again took up the directorial reins with this lightweight romantic comedy, which she again co-authored with her son, Christopher Thompson.  It is no great exaggeration to say that the words "French film comedy" and "Danièle Thompson" are virtually synonymous, since Thompson has worked on numerous such films since the 1960s, including some major box office successes - notably La Grande vadrouille (1966) and Les Aventures de Rabbi Jacob (1973), which were directed by her father, Gérard Oury.  With that in mind, it would be a very brave man (or woman) who takes it upon himself to slate her work, but, unfortunately, Décalage horaire makes such an unpleasant duty a necessity.

In a nutshell, Décalage horaire is barely watchable.  It is one of the most insulting, incoherent and implausible French films to have been made for some years.  It takes as its reference point the sentimentalised romantic comedies which the Hollywood film factory mercilessly churns out by the truckload.  Now you would have thought that no self-respecting French film director would be tempted to go anywhere near this kind of sugar sweet cinematic tosh.  After all, French cinema has a reputation for sophistication, authenticity and well-intended sobriety.  Apparently no longer.  Décalage horaire illustrates a trend in which American films are having a big influence on French cinema, which is presumably a reaction to the growing popularity of American films with the French population at large.  This is a worrying trend, particularly when the result is an inconsequential piece of nonsense of the kind that Décalage horaire appears to represent.

In criticising this film, it is hard to know where to start.  Talk about a sitting duck.  Is it that the improbable plot, which relies almost entirely on ludicrous chance developments, is just too incredible to be taken seriously?  Is it that the staging of the piece is too static, the majority of the film taking place in a hotel bedroom?  Is it the relentless series of clichés, which include every possible variation of the mobile phone gag you could possibly imagine, and a few more besides.  Or is it the over-reliance on smoochy music to create a mood which the film singularly fails to create in other areas.  No, the primary reason why the film sucks so badly is because there is absolutely no chemistry between its two lead actors.

When the script goes to great pains to emphasise the differences between the two characters, Rose and Félix, there has to be something pretty tangible to suggest the mutual compatibility of the two people, otherwise how else can this be taken seriously as a love story?  Unfortunately, in spite of the formidable acting talent of Jean Reno and Juliette Binoche, there is nothing to suggest that two characters are meant for one another.  When Rose and Félix do finally fall for one another, there is a sense of queasiness, if not shock, as you ask yourself:  "Are they totally out of their minds?"

From watching this film it becomes painfully apparent that Danièle Thompson is much better suited to the conventional forms of French comedy, be that farce or comedy-drama.  This kind of pseudo-American romantic comedy looks awful when made by the French, and this could also explain why its stars, Reno and Binoche, are having such a hard time trying to make it work. If you are mildly drunk or badly in need of a soporific, Décalage horaire might just be bearable.  Try to watch it stone cold sober, wide awake and in full possession of your faculties, and the chances are that you really will end up suffering... from Jet Lag.
© James Travers 2004
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Danièle Thompson film:
Fauteuils d'orchestre (2006)

Film Synopsis

Two people who have absolutely nothing in common meet by chance at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport and find that they just cannot keep apart.  He is Félix, the introspective CEO of a frozen food conglomerate, who is on his way to Munich to attend a funeral and attempt to patch things up with his ex-wife.  She is Rose, a self-absorbed, outgoing beautician who is about to jet off to Mexico to escape from her aggressive boyfriend Sergio and begin a new life.  They meet, they part, they meet again, they part again, and so on.  Somehow Fate - helped by striking airport staff, defective computers and a sudden spell of bad weather - seems determined to bring them together, even though they could not be more ill-suited for one another.  Rose and Félix finally end up sharing a hotel room together.  Maybe it was meant to happen...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Danièle Thompson
  • Script: Christopher Thompson, Danièle Thompson
  • Cinematographer: Patrick Blossier
  • Music: Eric Serra
  • Cast: Juliette Binoche (Rose), Jean Reno (Félix), Sergi López (Sergio), Scali Delpeyrat (The Doctor), Karine Belly (Air France Attendant), Raoul Billerey (Félix's Father), Nadège Beausson-Diagne (A Roissy Passenger), Alice Taglioni (Ground Hostess), Jérôme Keen (The Concierge), Sébastien Lalanne (The Barman), Michel Lepriol (The Waiter), M'bembo (Post Office Employee), Laurence Colussi (Hostess), Lucy Harrison (Hostess), Rebecca Steele (Hostess), Thiam Aïssatou (Hostess), Édouard Daladier (Himself (archive footage)), Larry King (Himself (archive footage))
  • Country: France / UK
  • Language: French
  • Support: Color
  • Runtime: 91 min
  • Aka: Jet Lag

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